A liquid marble has a porous and superhydrophobic shell, which prevents the liquid core within the
marble from making any contact with outside surfaces, but at the same time allows gases to transport
freely across the shell. In this study we demonstrated the use of this unique property of liquid marbles to
build respirable micro-biological reactors to cultivate microorganisms. Liquid marbles loaded with two
kinds of microorganism cultures with different preference to oxygen were studied. Due to the presence
of oxygen in the cultivation environment, significant differences in cell proliferation between the two
microorganisms were observed within the liquid marbles. Furthermore, we found that this respirable
bioreactor provides a more suitable environment for the growth of an aerobe than that in McCartney
bottles with shaking incubation; cell concentration increased more rapidly in liquid marbles.